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Elaine Sciolino

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American writer
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Elaine Sciolino
Born
Occupation(s)Journalist, author
Notable credit(s)The New York Times;The Outlaw State,Persian Mirrors,La Seduction,The Only Street in Paris,The Seine (books)
SpouseAndrew R. Plump
Children2
Websiteelainesciolino.com

Elaine Sciolino is a contributing writer and former Paris bureau chief forThe New York Times based in Paris. She has written six books.

Early life

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A native ofBuffalo,New York, Elaine Sciolino grew up in its Italian-American neighborhood on the city’s West Side. Her father, Anthony Sciolino, was the founder and owner of Latina Importing Company, an Italian specialty food store inNiagara Falls. Her mother, Jeannette Limeri Sciolino, was a homemaker and part-time painter.

Sciolino attended Holy Angels Elementary School,Holy Angels Academy, andCanisius College, a Jesuit-run liberal arts college, graduating summa cum laude. She studied French history in graduate school atNew York University on a National Defense Education Act IV doctoral fellowship. She received a master's degree and finished her doctoral courses and exams, but never wrote her doctoral dissertation onLouis-Sébastien Mercier, the eighteenth-century writer considered to be the first street reporter ofParis.

Career

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Working atNewsweek in Paris, Sciolino was the first American and the first woman to interviewAyatollahRuhollah Khomeini when he came to France in exile in 1978. She accompanied him on his plane toTehran in 1979, and covered theIranian revolution, the U.S. hostage crisis inIran and theIran–Iraq War from both sides of the border. InRome, she covered theVatican and traveled withPope John Paul II.

Books

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Sciolino has written six books.

Her first book,The Outlaw State: Saddam Hussein’s Quest for Power and the Gulf Crisis (1991) was based on her reporting inIraq and followed theIraqi invasion of Kuwait. She wrote it in six months with two daughters under the age of two, which she later said was a crazy thing to do. It was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection.

Her next book,Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran (2000, second edition in 2005), was based on twenty years of coveringIran forNewsweek andThe New York Times.

After she lived inParis for several years, Sciolino wroteLa Seduction: How the French Play the Game of Life (2011). It examined all aspects of France – from culture to foreign policy, from the bedroom to the boardroom – through the prism of seduction.T Magazine called it one of the best books of 2011.[citation needed] "From dinner parties to interviews, Sciolino aims her sharp pen at the behavior of the Parisian establishment," wroteLe Nouvel Observateur.[citation needed] Sciolino "investigates the very depths of French culture," wroteLe Monde.[citation needed]

The book that followed,The Only Street in Paris: Life on the Rue des Martyrs (2015), about the life of a street in her neighborhood, was aNew York Times best seller.[citation needed] Kate Betts of theNew York Times wrote that "she has Paris at her feet";[1] theChicago Tribune called her "a storyteller at heart."[2]

Sciolino's bookThe Seine: The River That Made Paris, published in 2019, was a national bestseller. In theNew York Times,Edmund White called Sciolino "a graceful, companionable writer, someone who speaks about France in the most enjoyably American way."[3]David A. Bell, Professor of History at Princeton University, said, "Sciolino writes with the authority of a historian, the sleuthing skills of a journalist, and the voice of a storyteller eager to recount the tales of those who have been touched by the Seine."[4]

Adventures in the Louvre: How to Fall in Love with the World’s Greatest Museum, was scheduled to be published byW. W. Norton & Co. in April 2025. "Blending journalism, travelogue, history, and memoir, she demystifies theLouvre, the largest and most famous museum in the world. She approaches the Louvre as neither an art historian nor a tour guide but as a lifelong reporter. She introduces us to the people who are the lifeblood of the museum including curators, artisans, and gardeners. Sciolino shares her encounters with firefighters who take her into the basements and up onto the roof, the night watchman who believes in ghosts, the director of paintings who identifies five portraits more beautiful than theMona Lisa, the curator who discovered a missing feather of theWinged Victory of Samothrace, the window washer who makes rainbows on theIM Pei pyramid, the photographer who finds queerness in ancient Greek and Roman sculptures."[5] In a starred advance review,Kirkus Reviews wrote: “Deftly weaving history and memoir… Sciolino offers a spirited journey through France’s most storied museum, the Louvre… An intimate visit with a generous, genial guide.”[6]

Personal life

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In 1986, Sciolino married Andrew Plump, an attorney specializing in international arbitration in the Paris office of the Linklaters law firm. They have two daughters, Alessandra Plump, a special education teacher in Washington, D.C., and Gabriela Plump, managing director for theInitiative for Policy Dialogue atColumbia University.

Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^Betts, Kate (2 December 2015)."'The Only Street in Paris,' by Elaine Sciolino".The New York Times. Retrieved25 February 2025.
  2. ^"Elaine Sciolino". Chicago Tribune. 2021-08-22. Retrieved 2024-10-16.[better source needed]
  3. ^White, Edmund (5 November 2019)."A Book Full of Reasons to Love Paris".The New York Times. Retrieved25 February 2025.
  4. ^"Author Talk and Book Signing with Elaine Sciolino".French Library. Retrieved25 February 2025.
  5. ^https://cipgs.princeton.edu/events/adventures-louvre-how-fall-love-world%E2%80%99s-greatest-museum
  6. ^"Review:Adventures in the Louvre: How to Fall in Love With the World's Greatest Museum". Kirkus. 13 December 2024. Retrieved25 February 2025.

External links

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